The Evolution of a Rural Free Black Community

Goochland County, Virginia, 1782-1832

Reginald D Butler author Peter S Onuf editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Virginia Press

Publishing:5th May '25

£96.00

This title is due to be published on 5th May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This hardback is available in another edition too:

The Evolution of a Rural Free Black Community cover

A long-awaited work by one of the deans of Black studies

Reginald Butler, the second director of UVA’s Carter G. Woodson Institute, wrote an influential and much-cited but never published dissertation at Johns Hopkins University that focused on community formation among the free Black population of Virginia. His innovative and meticulous research in county and state archives enabled him to reconstruct the ties that bound free Black Virginians to each other and their enslaved neighbors, as well as to white employers and officials.

Butler showed that community formation emerged in response to an oppressive, often violent regime of racial domination, yet it also depended on the critical role free Black people played in the local economy and their ability to sustain reciprocally beneficial working relations with their white neighbors. By reconstructing the lived experience of free Black families and the community they created at the neighborhood level, Butler’s revelatory study offers still fresh perspectives on race and slavery in the formative decades of Virginian and American history. Now this seminal work finally sees the light of day, accompanied by several framing essays that properly situate Butler’s foundational scholarship on free Black Americans in this still-burgeoning field.

ISBN: 9780813952598

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm

Weight: unknown

298 pages